Elemental Wonders:
At Home in Hawaii

Though I’ve visited and lived in many cities, home has always been one place: the island of Oahu, where I grew up and now raise my own family. It’s not four walls that call but the land itself – undulating sand, mountains outlined against a steadfast sky, forests bubbling with life and stories – places of endless natural wonder and history that never fail to anchor me.

To truly connect with Hawaii is to be a participant, student and wonderer, and these unforgettable deep dives – designed by Four Seasons – illuminate core elements of island life that are profoundly meaningful to all who call it home.

Salt | Hualalai

Of all Hawaii’s small wonders, from shells of adornment to plants of legend and love, the sea contains the purest of all. “The natural salt the ocean provided was a cornerstone of Hawaiian living,” says Uncle Earl Regidor, Kaʻūpūlehu Cultural Center Manager at Four Seasons Resort Hualalai. Used in ceremony (alaea salt blessed my new home) and cooking (seasoning the pig that filled our last family imu), it’s also used to heal.

Hiking along the coast adjacent to Four Seasons Resort Hualalai leads guests to the centuries-old Kaʻūpūlehu salt flats. When seawater pools on black lava and dries in the sun, it forms salt that guests gently scoop with wooden spoons and collect in fabric bags.

This precious harvest is used during a private, interactive cooking class where guests explore varieties and their use in traditional Hawaiian cooking and in dishes prepared for the occasion. Seven Hawaiian sea salt varieties are also used in the Salts of the Ocean body treatment at the Spa to promote detoxification and healing.

Sugar | Maui

Stories percolate throughout Hawaii’s landscapes, and the story of sugar is one important part of island history that visitors don’t often experience.

In the Fire & Wine adventure at Four Seasons Resort Maui, guests are invited to do so after arriving by helicopter at historic Haiku House estate on Maui’s north shore. After a wine tasting to determine the evening’s food pairings, guests embark on a private tour led by the director of the Alexander & Baldwin Sugar Museum, who shares stories about the history of the land, estate owners and sugar itself – brought on voyaging canoes millennia ago and Hawaii’s dominant industry from its beginnings in 1835 until 1959.

Later, hand-selected local ingredients are cooked over an open kiawe (mesquite) fire and served by Maui chef and Advanced Sommelier Yeshua Goodman. A special dessert prepared at the fire provides a sweet finish.

“Guests are able to connect deeply to a part of the island not easily accessed but so rich in history,” says Executive Pastry Chef Riccardo Menicucci. “I get to tell part of the story through doing what I love best, expressing myself through food to delight others.”

Fish | Lanai

Just stepping onto the 140-square-mile island of Lanai transports you back in time to an enduring way of life.

“On Lanai, the majority of the local community still sustains traditionally through ocean gathering and hunting,” says Jay Ballesteros, Cultural Guide at Four Seasons Resort Lanai.

The Resort’s cultural fishing expedition allows guests to understand this important lifestyle first-hand by gathering directly from the sea themselves. “The guides are all local and culturally connected, and go between the lines to personalize the experience,” Ballesteros says, including hands-on practice with different types of coastal fishing, accompanied by a beach picnic and tales of history, culture and authentic island life.

The experience deepens with stops at the old Keomoku fishing village and 800-year-old Waia‘ōpae Fishpond, being rebuilt today to revive the unique Hawaiian aquaculture system that was based on it. At day’s end, if a guest’s catch is big enough, it can be prepared for dinner back at the Resort for a truly sea-to-table experience.

Canoe | Oahu

Heading out for a day at sea has been ingrained in island life since Hawaiians first arrived in voyaging canoes using the stars to find their way.

This ancient art of voyaging comes to life at Four Seasons Resort O‘ahu at Ko Olina as guests climb from the sand and into the wa‘a (canoe) Ka‘aumoana, hand-built by experienced navigator Nakoa Prejean.

“Being in a traditionally styled Hawaiian sailing canoe is completely different from any type of adventure,” Prejean says. “It gives guests a cultural connection to some of the ancient ways prevalent in our culture for thousands of years.” As the Ka‘aumoana sails out of the lagoon along the west coast of Oahu, the the ocean’s pure intimacy and thrill unfold while Prejean’s team shares stories of voyaging and wahi pana (storied places).

The canoe then heads to private snorkelling spots so guests can dive in and explore pristine marine environments abundant with sea turtles and spinner dolphins. “Out there in the wa‘a,” Prejean says, “they feel connected with the ocean and make unforgettable memories.”

Your Journey Begins Here

Answer the call of the islands.

Four Seasons Resort Hualalai

Eat Like a Local: New Orleans

Po’ boys, beignets, gumbo, étouffée: New Orleans is famous for its unique culture and cuisine.  Locals like to say that food is part of every aspect of life in the Big Easy, with dishes that reflect the city’s rich heritage, influenced by French, Cajun, West African and Spanish influences.

Explore the flavours of New Orleans

Get a taste of the city at the new Four Seasons Hotel New Orleans, where two acclaimed local chefs have created signature restaurants that celebrate Louisiana’s diverse flavours. Explore the region’s finest ingredients – like crawfish and oysters – paired with knowledgeable service and eat like a local in impeccable Four Seasons style.

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LOCAL FAVOURITES AT MISS RIVER

Chef Alon Shaya’s new restaurant, Miss River, is “a love letter to Louisiana,” he says, offering elevated takes on local favourites. It’s a departure from the James Beard Award–winning chef’s usual fare; his acclaimed Saba restaurant highlights his Israeli heritage. But at Miss River, every aspect – from the menu to the décor – celebrates New Orleans: a colour palette reflecting the hues of the Garden District, ironwork accents that bring to mind the French Quarter, art by local artists lining the walls.

The ingredient-driven menu draws on Shaya’s extensive network of fishermen, farmers and other local purveyors, showcasing his unique perspective on beloved local dishes. Try the Clay Pot Dirty Rice, served with seared duck breast, duck egg yolk and scallions, or the Salt-Crusted Gulf Red Snapper, with rosemary, lemon and extra-virgin olive oil. Other can’t-miss menu items: Duck and Andouille Gumbo – a dark roux, filé, Louisiana rice and potato salad – and the Carved Buttermilk Fried Chicken – light but crackly crisp, carved tableside. “Food is the world to me,” Shaya says. “I’m paying respect to and celebrating the incredible flavours and traditions of this magical place.”

 

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The bar seats 30 and offers an inventive cocktail menu, as well as an expansive wine list that includes sparkling wines from around the world. At the intimate Sommelier Table, up to five guests can enjoy curated tastings guided by the restaurant’s wine expert. The real showstopper: the Food Stage, where guests can watch the extravagant plating of the restaurant’s dishes. “Miss River is a place for celebration,” says General Manager Mali Carow, “where incredible food, drink and ambiance combine for unforgettable dining experiences.”

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A SENSE OF PLACE AT CHEMIN À LA MER

Discover a “pathway to the sea” at new restaurant Chemin à La Mer, where Chef Donald Link prepares Louisiana flavours with classic French technique, set to rare panoramic views of the Mississippi River. The celebrated chef hails from Cajun country – or South Louisiana – where his great-grandparents were rice farmers. His grandparents taught him to prepare mainstays like rich gumbo, boudin and smothered pork. “The region is in my DNA,” he says.

The eclectic menu is inspired by Link’s Cajun roots, as well as his travels around the world. For a sampling of his range, try the impressive Le Grand Plate de Mer, influenced by his time in the French Antilles: oysters on the half shell, steamed Louisiana shrimp, West Indies crab salad, snapper ceviche. Trips to Paris and the Burgundy regions influenced dishes like Ora King Salmon with French Lentils and Pan-Seared Jumbo Shrimp With White Beans and Pistou. For a dramatic dinner for two, opt for the bone-in côte de boeuf, expertly carved at your table. And, of course, the menu captures the character of New Orleans: seafood gumbo with okra and Louisiana rice, a raw bar serving oysters from nearby Bayou La Batre and Dauphin Island.

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“Chef Link’s concept here is a personal reflection of who he is, not only from what you find on your plate but in every detail,” says Carow.

The space itself is inspired by its unrivalled riverside location and the natural landscape of Louisiana. The oak walls and oak walnut floor are reminiscent of a ship’s deck – and a reminder of the river’s importance in the history of New Orleans – offset by the luxe Scala marble tabletops and bar. Expansive floor-to-ceiling windows offer stunning views of the river and city, stretching out into the distance.

“It was very important to me to honour the sense of place,” Link says. “This space reflects its name, ‘pathway to the sea,’ as the Mississippi River plays such a vital role in the fabric of New Orleans, from its commerce at the port to fishing and hunting along its basin to irrigation for crop production to serving as the greatest backdrop for a celebration of food.”

The Chefs You Need to Know in Philadelphia

Like many Philadelphia-area residents, Greg Vernick grew up spending summers “down the shore.” His parents have a place in Margate, an Absecon Island town where the population quintuples during the summer. There, between the bay and ocean, Vernick’s love of the sea and seafood was born. “There’s nowhere I’d rather be,” says the chef-owner of Vernick Food + Drink and chef-manager of Vernick Coffee and Vernick Fish at Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center.


Chef Vernick Portrait

Greg Vernick’s affinity for the region’s seafood is both personal and professional.

Depths of Flavour

Forty miles south of Margate, in Cape May, New Jersey, the V-shaped mouth of the Delaware Bay decants into the Atlantic Ocean. In the brackish backwaters, a resurgent oyster industry thrives. “Sweet Amalias – they’re the best,” Vernick says. The farmers raising these small but plump and sparklingly clean oysters deliver 250 of them once a week to Vernick Fish, and, he says, “Once we’re out, we’re out.”

The chef keeps the supply chain tight at Vernick Fish, where sustainable seafood is top of mind. Sometimes that means working directly with small producers like Sweet Amalia Oyster Farm. Other times, it means relying on a company like Island Creek Oyster Co., which distributes its own and other farms’ oysters, turning six trucks on the road into just one. Sometimes it’s a trade-off: carbon emissions for access to sustainable species such as abundant Galician sardines (tinned in olive oil and served with house-baked sourdough) and New Zealand’s Ōra King salmon (gently smoked tartare with quail egg and Parmesan). Other times, it’s as straightforward as sourcing porgy and bluefish from the mid-Atlantic, but comes with the added challenge of convincing diners that fish with a poor reputation can be delicious in the right hands.


Diners And Oysters At Vernick

Left: At Vernick Fish, guests discover the bounty of the mid-Atlantic;
right: On the Vernick Fish dinner menu are lists of tartares and raw selections.

As the organic and local food movements have become more central to quality restaurants, sustainable seafood is catching on across Philadelphia. Jersey oysters like Stormy Bays, Rose Coves and High Bar Harbors adorn the raw bar menus of Oyster House in Center City and Aether in Fishtown.

At East Passyunk’s sister restaurants Laurel and In the Valley (also known as ITV), “Top Chef” winner Nicholas Elmi serves line-caught Atlantic albacore tuna, an overlooked but tasty alternative to overfished Pacific species. The choicest belly cut is cured and diced for creative crudos and tartares, and the scraps and trim are transformed into robust tuna Bolognese for house-made rigatoni.

“‘Sustainable’ is a big word with many meanings,” Vernick says. “I think the answer is to find balance. With fish, things are so fluid. You have to be nimble.”

Play All Day

By the time the sun comes up over the Delaware River and canines start romping around the grassy space across from Fiore Fine Foods, Justine MacNeil has already been at work for two hours. As part of the growing local contingent of all-day dining rooms, Fiore opens at 8:00 am every day, its handsome bar stacked with her anise-sugared morning buns, almond-ricotta cookies, schiacciate (a Tuscan flatbread jewelled with olives) and other Italian-inspired baked goods that glisten in the sunlight.


Justine Macneil Fiore Fine Foods

Justine MacNeil of Fiore Fine Foods

MacNeil, formerly a pastry chef at Del Posto in New York, relocated to Philadelphia with her chef husband, Ed Crochet. When they decided to open Fiore Fine Foods in Queen Village, the morning-till-evening hours were a key part of the plan.


Fiore Fine Foods Interiors

The bar at Fiore Fine Foods serves pastries by day and cocktails by night.

“If you’re paying rent all day, you might as well utilize the space,” she says. But the benefits are not only financial. “In my romantic idea, it’s a way to bring all facets of the culinary field to the table – bread, pastry, coffee, alcohol, savoury – and having all these different programs gives us a way to work with our friends who have expertise in these areas.”

While all-day concepts are plentiful these days in other locales, they’re a relatively recent phenomenon in Philly, where breakfast and lunch were long the domain of casual cafés or Center City power restaurants. Ambitious indie spots tended to stick to dinner hours, until Hungry Pigeon, a plant-filled hangout a few blocks from Fiore, made the scene in 2016 serving three meals a day. MacNeil and Crochet arrived in town not long after Hungry Pigeon debuted, and then came Suraya, a glittering Lebanese palace in Fishtown that opened with a market and an all-day café in 2017 and added a dining room and garden the following year. “We were like, ‘All right, so people want this,’” MacNeil says.


Fiore Fine Foods Day To Night

Left: A scrumptious morning pick-me-up at all-day café Fiore Fine Foods;
right: Ed Crochet’s pork shanks and polenta

Given how quickly her pistachio cornetti disappear, people clearly want breakfast, which can also include a fennel sausage, egg and fontina sandwich and a pizzetta layered with pears and stracchino. Crochet, a veteran of Philly restaurateur Stephen Starr’s organization, fires up his wood-burning oven and grill for lunch and dinner, sinking pork shanks into polenta and serving caramelized kalbi-style short ribs with fermented porcini. As the sun sets, the light flooding Fiore’s window-wrapped dining room takes on a lilac tint. The pooches reappear, out for their evening strolls. MacNeil and Crochet serve the last guests, clean up, kill the lights, and do it all again the next day.

To the Tooth

Philly has long been a pasta town. Italian immigration, with numbers swelling in the early 1900s, has had an enduring influence on its culinary DNA; today the metro area ranks behind only New York in Italian American population. Michael Vincent Ferreri, who grew up in an Italian American household in Rochester, New York, adopted Philly as his hometown when he moved here in 2011. After honing his pasta-making skills at some of the city’s best restaurants, he moved to Res Ipsa in the Rittenhouse neighbourhood, where he’s dedicated himself to crafting unusual pastas. Dinner in this cosy café might involve lorighetti, which look like braided basket handles; culingioni, potato-filled bundles from Sardinia; or strascinati, a Pugliese cousin of orecchiette. Ferreri and his team make them all in-house with semolina milled weekly at Green Meadow Farm in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.


Vincent Ferreri Res Ipsa

Res Ipsa’s Michael Vincent Ferreri

“I think the size of the restaurant speaks very pleasantly to what we’re doing, because I could make something, run it on special, and I’ll only need five or six orders of it,” Ferreri says. “So some of the pasta shapes that are a little bit more involved, that take a little bit more time – even just to learn, let alone to physically make – we can make and serve people things that you wouldn’t normally be able to get in most restaurants in America.” The shapes take diners deeper into pasta-making traditions that vary not just from region to region in Italy, but from town to town.


Res Ipsa Handmade Pasta Dishes

Left: Res Ipsa’s pasta shapes provide a culinary tour of Italian towns;
right: Philadelphia’s Res Ipsa satisfies diners’ hunger for comfort food and culinary expertise.

Pasta exists on a spectrum in Philly, from superb basics, like gumdrop-size potato gnocchi with emerald pesto at Mr. Joe’s Café and buttered bow ties kissed with lemon and poppyseed at Musi, to the esoteric shapes Marc Vetri makes at his Vetri Cucina with fresh flour milled on site from whole local grains. The key, Ferreri says, isn’t whether the pasta is fancy: “It should be very comforting, and it should be very homey. For me, that’s what pasta is all about.”

Oh, Natural

Chloe Grigri is “perpetually dehydrated,” she says, draining a glass of water at Le Caveau, her new bar in the Bella Vista neighbourhood. Located above Good King – the 6-year-old French tavern she owns with her father – Le Caveau is all lace curtains, cosy tables, exposed brick attractively crusted with plaster, and wine bottles in colour-blocked rows of vermilion, blond, apricot, plum and pale pink. She’s been tasting all the wines in the yearlong lead-up to the bar’s late 2019 opening. Hence the dehydration.


Chloe Grigi Le Caveau

Chloe Grigri opened the doors to wine bar Le Caveau in autumn 2019.

Most of the labels Grigri has curated for Le Caveau are natural, made from organic grapes and without additives. “Natural wine is what wine has always been,” she says; the style predates modern technology and chemically altered agriculture. When she began skewing Good King’s selection towards natural winemakers five years ago, the movement was nascent in Philly. Now it’s in full bloom, with restaurants like Walnut Street Café in University City and Friday Saturday Sunday in Rittenhouse creating lists around natural bottles, and retailers like Tinys in Port Richmond and Bloomsday Café in Society Hill dedicated to the stuff. “Natural wine has pushed itself to the forefront in such a way that there is no restaurant that isn’t doing it in some capacity,” says Grigri, who can claim a good portion of the credit for that state of affairs.


Charcuterie At Le Caveau

Le Caveau provides a warm welcome to organically minded oenophiles.

Complemented by cheeses, charcuterie, and simple bar snacks like olives and nuts, about 15 wines are available by the glass at Le Caveau, but intimate clusters of tables invite patrons to linger over full bottles of crushable Gamays and cult grower Champagnes the way Grigri does when she hangs out at bars à vins in France. “I’ve been strategically holding back certain hard-to-come-by wines for over a year,” she says – and now it’s time to pop some bottles.


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Elevated Cuisine

The local culinary scene reached new heights with the opening of star chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s Jean-Georges Philadelphia, one of four noteworthy dining outlets at the new Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center.

The express elevator rises 60 storeys into the sky, taking you to the lobby of Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia at Comcast Center and its JG SkyHigh lounge. An onyx staircase flanked by whispering twin waterfalls leads down to the 59th floor, where Jean-Georges Philadelphia’s 40-foot (12-metre) windows look out over the shoulders of skyscrapers, the city resembling a giant green-and-grey picnic blanket below. Executive Chef Nick Ugliarolo sips a turmeric latte and surveys the view: “Pretty beautiful, right?”


Chef Jean Georges

Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten says he’s “thrilled to be joining this culinary community.”

This vista welcomed the Connecticut native and five-year veteran of the Jean-Georges group when he relocated from New York to helm this flagship restaurant. “None of this was here,” he says, gesturing to the dining room’s glowing island bar, upholstered mid-century chairs and towering flower arrangements, “but from the view alone, I knew this was going to be awesome.”

If the visuals are what people come for, the food is why they come back. Ugliarolo says the menu balances Jean-Georges classics – “I could eat the black bass with sweet-and-sour jus every day,” he adds – with his own creations, including the amuse-bouche that gets things started. Serving three meals a day, the restaurant is as well-suited to a Gruyère cheeseburger as it is to Ugliarolo’s seven-course tasting menu. Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, the master behind the menu, says he’s “thrilled to be joining this culinary community.”

At street level, indoor-outdoor Vernick Fish from James Beard Award–winning local Chef Greg Vernick specializes in dishes ranging from classic (his signature Dover sole meunière) to inventive (uni-and-caviar French toast). Or stop by Vernick Coffee Bar for breakfast, lunch and coffee, either to go or to enjoy in a 40-seat communal dining space.

Whether you dine upstairs or downstairs, count on sterling service, says Ugliarolo. “People know they’re in good hands and they’re going to be taken care of.”


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YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

Discover a new side of Philadelphia.

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Where to Go Adventuring Like a Local in Mexico and the Caribbean

There’s something about flying south for the winter that enchants humankind as well as birds. And warm-weather getaways can be even more restorative – and transformative – when you partake in thrills that are delightfully different from those available back home. Staff members at Four Seasons hotels and resorts in the Caribbean and Mexico suggest some of their favourite things to see, eat and do – from wrangling lobster for your own dinner to indulging in a massage of mezcal and chocolate.

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Sip on a Superfood in Anguilla

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Wellness is always the order of the day at Four Seasons Resort and Residences Anguilla, perched on coralline beachside bluffs on the British territory’s northwest shore. Moringa, a local superfood plant, is considered highly nutritious, with powerful anti-inflammatory and tissue-protective properties. To kick off your morning, consider ordering Dean’s Green Supreme, a tropical blend of moringa leaves, bananas, orange juice and mango purée, at Half Shell Beach Bar on the frothy waters of Barnes Bay Beach.

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Continue a self-care morning in the seafront spa, where open-air spa cabanas sit adjacent to turquoise surf. Guests seeking a spa treatment connected to their location should book an Anguilla Salt Scrub, which reportedly detoxifies your skin; the island was once the largest exporter of salt in the Caribbean. (Bonus: The treatment includes a citrus vanilla mask body wrap and scalp and foot massages).

End the perfect day with a johnnycake-making class,  where you’ll whip up a patty whose base is baked salt fish, flour and eggs at Bamboo Bar and Grill. Or do as locals do and select your own fish from the catch of the day – whatever fish was hauled in from the sea that morning, such as crayfish, snapper or parrotfish. Usually, the culinary team puts fish in foil with onions, carrots, celery, garlic, tomatoes, butter and white wine. Then they place the fresh catch on the grill for 20 minutes and cook it to perfection.

Please note: In light of the latest COVID-19 guidelines, Four Seasons Resort and Residences Anguilla is closed but is accepting reservations for stays from November 1, 2020, onward.

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Craft Your Own Custom Tequila in Punta Mita, Mexico

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“If I could only have one meal for the rest of my life, I would make ceviche and have a beer,” says Jorge González, Executive Chef of Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita, set beside a picturesque bay on Mexico’s western coast. The citrus-cured fish is his dish of choice on hot days when he teaches a private cooking class in the outdoor kitchen of the Resort’s new restaurant, Dos Catrinas. When the catch of the day arrives by boat, he concocts a light ceviche, such as yellowtail snapper with soy sauce, lime and serrano pepper, and pairs it with the Resort’s very own CORA beer.

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Dos Catrinas highlights Mexico’s varied regional cuisines. González’s favourite dish on the menu is a modern duck confit with pink mole made from beets and white chocolate, but his eyes light up when he talks about the Tsi Kil Pak, a scrumptious pumpkin-seed dip of Mayan ancestry. He serves it with tlayuda, a toasted, paper-thin tortilla from Oaxaca.

The local pride that drives the menu is also apparent in the tequila-blending class taught by the Resort’s Cultural Concierge, Enrique Alejos. Guests learn to profile Mexico’s home-grown liquor using all five senses and then craft their own blend from the barrels of blanco, reposado, añejo and extra añejo on display. Each guest’s recipe is inscribed in a ledger so that the Resort can send a personalized taste of Mexico to you at home whenever you like.

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Lasso Lobsters in Nevis

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At the newly revamped oceanfront Four Seasons Resort Nevis – where green vervet monkeys frolic on the Robert Trent Jones II–designed golf course – plenty of on-site adventures are as authentic as they come.

One particularly delicious option? Diving for your own Caribbean spiny lobsters with a Nevisian dive master and a Four Seasons chef for their Dive & Dine program. “The dive site we visit most isn’t too frequented,” says Sous-Chef Eddy Dhenin. “Other sea life you may encounter includes nurse sharks, parrotfish, trumpetfish and even Christmas tree worms.”

Back on shore, sip a rum punch as your chef grills your lobster with lemon and garlic butter. Dhenin’s advice: “Be sure to ask chef to share the recipe for a Caribbean sofrito marinade, made with organic ingredients from the Resort’s herb garden, used to bring out the sweetness of the lobster.”

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Then turn up the heat with another foodie exploit – Paw Paw Pepper Sauce cooking class, hosted by Four Seasons Resort Nevis butcher and local entrepreneur Llewellyn Clarke and Executive Chef Samuel Faggetti. “Nevisians are fanatical about their pepper sauce (locals don’t call it hot sauce), and they eat it on everything, everywhere from roti lunch counters to roadside barbecue stands,” Clarke says. For Paw Paw 101, you’ll dip into your homemade sauce – a blend that includes papaya, pepper and garlic – with conch and lobster fritters.

Don’t leave the island without taking the Resort’s kite-making class, which will have you constructing aerodynamic toys from bamboo strips, colourful tissue paper and string and flying them at The Flats, a nearby recreation centre overlooking the Caribbean Sea. “Kite flying has long been a part of our local Easter celebrations in Nevis,” says Jonathan Dutil, Guest Experience Coordinator – Nevisians host a kite-flying competition on Good Friday with categories like “Best Flying” and “Most Creative.” “It’s a great way to tap into our creativity and honour our local cultural heritage.”

Please note: Four Seasons Resort Nevis is closed but is accepting reservations for stays from October 7, 2020. 

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Relax with a Mezcal Massage in Mexico City

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Tucked in a vibrant hacienda with a leafy, canary-inhabited courtyard, Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City unites modern urban exploits with ancient Mexican traditions.

Take your jet-lagged mind to the spa, where the Pre-Hispanic Holistic Massage combines mezcal with chocolate and amaranth to put pep in your step the old-fashioned way. (Amaranth is a grain cultivated by Aztecs that reportedly made up 80 percent of their food sources.) “The best part of this massage is connecting with pre-Hispanic relaxation techniques,” says Cristina Gutierrez, Spa Manager, “starting with a shot of tequila to open the pores.”

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Speaking of drinks, mezcal – the spirit made from distilled agave – is all but required here. Imbibe like an expert at a tequila and mezcal tasting with the Hotel’s resident mixologists.

“Amores Cupreata is a perfect mezcal if you’re looking for something a little bit more complex than others, given the interesting evolution it has in the glass,” says Head Bartender Fran Calvo. “It starts with fresh aromas of agave, incense and toasted squash seeds, and on the mouth it feels slightly spicy, accompanied with a nice bitterness towards the end.” He’d pair it with bone marrow sopes – “the mix of fat with the body of the mezcal is amazing.”

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Swim With the World’s Largest Sharks in Los Cabos, Mexico

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Set on a pristine 2-mile stretch of Mexico’s Sea of Cortez,
Four Seasons Resort Los Cabos at Costas Palmas champions the many delights of the Baja California Peninsula. “Back in the 1950s, the East Cape was an escape for Hollywood celebrities and Texas fishermen,” says General Manager Borja Manchado. “They would arrive by small plane or boat, seeking the spirited adventure and peaceful requiescence of this secret paradise that was just a couple hours from home.”

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Among the awe-inspiring thrills available to guests: swimming with whale sharks, the largest fish in the sea at up to nearly 19,000 kilograms (41,888 lb.).

“This part of the Baja Peninsula is home to miles of swimmable beach, and some of the world’s best diving, snorkelling and sportfishing with nearly 900 species of fish that reside in the Sea of Cortez,” says Denis Espina, the Resort’s Manager.

If you need a spa treatment after your electrifying swim, choose one of the many options with local roots in the 10-room Oasis Spa. “We have created an environment that replicates the harmonious balance of nature and honours the indigenous essentials of the desert, mountains and sea,” says Director of Spa Lina Morales, “to provide guests with a holistic salve that heals the soul while easing the mind and body.”

Your Journey Begins Here

What local adventures will you discover?

Hotel by ocean

Taking Our Time:
A Father-Son Journey Through Asia

As the father of two teenage boys who have thoroughly assimilated personal tech into their lives, I often struggle to find ways to expand their horizons beyond their Retina displays.

Time keeps slipping into the future, after all, and my sons will only be under my direct guidance for a few more blink-and-you’ll-miss-them years.

So how to open their eyes to the truth that typing IRL (“in real life”) implies you do, in fact, have a real life? A life that the social media networks of the world may still be part of, but hold much less power over?

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Experience has shown that teaching two boys the same thing separately requires less time and effort than attempting to teach them that same thing together. This approach has served me well and led to some memorable one-on-one outings.

None more so than a recent trip to the Far East with my younger son, Jack. Embracing my 15-year-old’s love of travel, I decided to make this particular excursion a little more, as we Gen Xers used to say, extreme.

I wagered that living unfiltered lives for three weeks in Singapore and Tokyo would reveal the important difference between seeing videos about a place and actually experiencing it.

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The journey of 1,000 miles may begin with a single step, but our journey of 25,000 miles began with a long-haul flight from Denver to London. If you’re going to explore the other side of the world, why not take the long way around?

Because I’d previously stayed at Four Seasons Hotel London at Park Lane on business, Jeremy Dawson and James Birkett (the Hotel’s Assistant Manager and Valet Supervisor, respectively) immediately recognized me and went about initiating Jack into the fraternity of world travellers. That project culminated with a jaunt in the Hotel’s Rolls-Royce for a meal with friends at Gymkhana.

We were both immediately taken aback by the scale, scope and sensory overload of the Jewel Changi Airport.

Our first proper stop on the other side of the world was Singapore, where we were both immediately taken aback by the scale, scope and sensory overload of the Jewel Changi Airport complex – which includes a 130-foot-high waterfall, the largest indoor water feature in the world. But as the point of this trip was not simply to stand in different spots and take selfies as proof of our escapades (although we certainly did that), I decided to enlist some help.

In this case, help came in the form of Gladys Lim, our Concierge at Four Seasons Hotel Singapore. After explaining to Gladys that my goal for this trek was to help Jack tangibly connect with the wider world, she knew just who to call – Natalie Chai, who would become our trusted tour guide and Jack’s confidant. But first, we fuelled ourselves on Hainanese chicken rice, a famous local dish at the modern Asian brasserie One-Ninety.

Fs Father Son Journey Asia Singapore 3

Natalie, as you would expect any good tour guide to be, was a fount of information. But while certainly interesting and perspective-expanding, the facts she imparted paled in comparison to the impression she herself made on Jack.

Somewhere among the city-state’s famed hawker stalls, possibly after a round of chili crabs at Chijmes, Jack and Natalie became friends. IRL friends. And while they will stay in touch via technology, it is the bond they formed on the streets of Singapore that will forever tie them together – even if, eventually, only in each other’s memories.

That was the beauty of this trip. Those small (but not really) moments of personal interaction when a smile or Google-translated phrase was enough to cross all manner of cultural barriers. Little shots of human connection and personal humility that can only come when, say, you find yourself and your 15-year-old man-child in a YouTuber-endorsed dive of a noodle shop, eating more sesame pasta–based carbs than even a marathon runner could manage.

Fs Father Son Journey Asia Shanghai Final

Or welcoming the unrivalled calm of the immaculately manicured Imperial Palace grounds – an island of introspection after the whirlwind, ramen-based adventures of Tokyo Station’s underground mall.

Or savouring orange and apple marmalade at Motif, set within Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi, and then lingering in the Four Seasons farewell when concierge team members Mari Oshitani and Mami Kumoda stood and waved goodbye until we boarded our train for the airport.

Fs Father Son Journey Tokyo Final

Because of these moments and dozens of others, the Jack that’s upstairs in his room as I write this is not the same Jack I boarded a plane with. Is it a big change? Not especially. Not yet. But the idea was to redirect the way he views the world and his place in it. To that end, score one for Dad.

Fs Gordon Tokyo Palace

Your Journey Begins Here

How will travel change you?

view of London Park